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  • They Do Not Want To Stand Off

    THEY DO NOT WANT TO STAND OFF
    by Anna Hakobyan

    Haykakan Zhamanak
    Aug 5 2008
    Armenia

    It became known yesterday [on 4 August] that the US Senate approved the
    candidacy of Marie Yovanovitch for the office of the US ambassador to
    Armenia. We have numerously said in the past the Armenian-US relations
    were not at their height due to absence of an ambassador to Armenia
    and this could not but have had an impact on the quality of relations
    in general. However, the US administration seemed not to spare place
    for Armenia and did not engage seriously in the issue of having a
    plenipotentiary ambassador to Armenia. The [former] ambassador to
    Armenia, John Evans, was recalled with the official interpretation
    that he had expressed an opinion contradicting the official opinion
    of the US administration and made a statement recognizing the Armenian
    genocide.

    [Passage omitted: reference to candidacy of Richard Hoagland to the
    post of the US ambassador to Armenia]

    It is noteworthy that Yovanovitch like Richard Hoagland did not
    describe "the events" of the 1915 a genocide.

    [Passage omitted: description of Yovanovitch's formulation of the
    Armenian Genocide, which contained the word "genocide", but said it
    is used by the Armenians]

    Armenian lobby dissatisfied

    Naturally, this response could not content the Armenian lobby and
    the senators influenced by it. However, this did not at all hinder
    the approval of Yovanovitch's candidacy, and Senator Robert Menendez,
    who became a great hero of the Armenian community in the USA, did not
    veto her candidacy, as he did two times in Hoagland's case. Meanwhile,
    Hoagland's and Yovanovitch's responses are not different in any way -
    the Armenian "Medz Yeghern" [Armenian phrase meaning "great genocide"]
    expression could not have satisfied the senators, who had demanded
    that candidates for the ambassador call the massacres of 1915 a
    "genocide". This means that the USA has not had an ambassador to
    Armenia for two years not because John Evans pronounced the word
    "genocide", and Richard Hoagland did not pronounce this word, and,
    moreover, not because the Armenian lobby in the USA and some senators
    did not like Richard Hoagland, but only because the US administration
    just did not need it.

    Time to have an ambassador

    Why it was not needed is a separate issue, but a fact remains a fact
    that the candidacy of the ambassador has been approved now, which
    means, in turn, that a necessity to have an ambassador in Armenia
    has emerged finally. This cannot but be directly connected with the
    political situation in Armenia.

    At the time, when the USA did not have an ambassador and the US
    administration did not make special efforts to achieve the opposite
    two national elections were rigged in Armenia - the [May 2007]
    parliamentary and the [February 2008] presidential, and the 1 March
    events [disturbances with casualties] followed the presidential
    election.

    At present, an autumn of turbulent political developments and
    changes is expected in Armenia. And by strange coincidence, the new
    US ambassador to Armenia will start her active work in autumn. It
    does not follow at all from the abovementioned that Yovanovitch's
    coming or not coming to Armenia will anyway influence the course of
    developments expected in Armenia. Not at all, this is most likely the
    case when the US government just does not want to miss what is going
    on - upon necessity, why not, also spreading news that it happened
    with the US support and participation.

    It is not incidental that a week prior to Yovanovitch's appointment,
    she was characterized as a specialist of "coloured revolutions" in
    the Azerbaijani press. On the other hand, Russia apparently supports
    Armenia's [opposition] Popular Movement and is entirely loyal to
    the Armenia government, which is breathing its last breath. No
    matter how strange it is, the PACE [Parliamentary Assembly of the
    Council of Europe], which decided to give Armenia time till January
    [prolonging the term of its resolution, which recommends democratic
    reforms in Armenia], unexpectedly tightened its position - speaking
    about a deadline in September. It turns out that all of them do not
    want to stand off the expected political developments in Armenia,
    and when activity and participants emerge around a matter, it means
    that the result is near.
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